Casey Anthony: Orlando attorney Diana Tennis adds to WOFL coverage
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Casey Anthony: Orlando attorney Diana Tennis adds to WOFL coverage
Casey Anthony: Orlando attorney Diana Tennis adds to WOFL coverage
posted by halboedeker on October, 1 2010 6:07 PM
Attorney Diana Tennis is offering legal analysis for WOFL-Ch. 35. Photo credit: Handout art
WOFL-Ch. 35 has deepened its Casey Anthony coverage by adding Orlando attorney Diana Tennis as an analyst.
In another sharp move, WOFL has anchor Bob Frier debrief Tennis about issues. Their conversation is intelligent, down-to-earth, lively. It’s as if you’re listening to two friends discuss the case.
On Thursday evening, they discussed the number of prosecution witnesses in the case, which could approach 300.
“It’s hard to overstate how unusual this is,” Tennis said. “Your typical murder case, even if there were lots and lots of unusual things going on, would still only have 50, 60, 70 witnesses tops.”
Anthony is charged with first-degree murder in the death of her daughter, Caylee.
In Anthony reporting today, WESH-Ch. 2’s Bob Kealing returned to the issue of duct tape. Roy Kronk, the meter reader who found Caylee’s remains, said the duct tape was across the toddler’s mouth. Defense attorney Cheney Mason this week said that photos show the tape “was not adhered to any part of this child — some stuck on the hair, that’s all.”
Orlando attorney Richard Hornsby theorized, in analysis for WESH, that the defense could argue that the tape was placed on Caylee after she died or used to wrap the child in a bag.
But David Evans, Kronk’s attorney, told Kealing: “The idea that the tape was used to somehow wrap up the remains is completely inconsistent with what Roy saw.”
New Anthony attorney Ann Finnell, a death penalty expert who is working pro bono, filed a motion that her expenses could approach $20,000. Those expenses would include hiring a private investigator.
“Most of those expenses would only crop up if Anthony is convicted of premeditated murder,” WESH anchor Jim Payne noted.
WFTV-Ch. 9 anchor Bob Opsahl listed some Finnell expenses: $7,500 for psychological tests and $4,000 for her travel to visit Casey’s relatives.
http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment_tv_tvblog/2010/10/casey-anthony-orlando-attorney-diana-tennis-adds-to-wofl-coverage.html
posted by halboedeker on October, 1 2010 6:07 PM
Attorney Diana Tennis is offering legal analysis for WOFL-Ch. 35. Photo credit: Handout art
WOFL-Ch. 35 has deepened its Casey Anthony coverage by adding Orlando attorney Diana Tennis as an analyst.
In another sharp move, WOFL has anchor Bob Frier debrief Tennis about issues. Their conversation is intelligent, down-to-earth, lively. It’s as if you’re listening to two friends discuss the case.
On Thursday evening, they discussed the number of prosecution witnesses in the case, which could approach 300.
“It’s hard to overstate how unusual this is,” Tennis said. “Your typical murder case, even if there were lots and lots of unusual things going on, would still only have 50, 60, 70 witnesses tops.”
Anthony is charged with first-degree murder in the death of her daughter, Caylee.
In Anthony reporting today, WESH-Ch. 2’s Bob Kealing returned to the issue of duct tape. Roy Kronk, the meter reader who found Caylee’s remains, said the duct tape was across the toddler’s mouth. Defense attorney Cheney Mason this week said that photos show the tape “was not adhered to any part of this child — some stuck on the hair, that’s all.”
Orlando attorney Richard Hornsby theorized, in analysis for WESH, that the defense could argue that the tape was placed on Caylee after she died or used to wrap the child in a bag.
But David Evans, Kronk’s attorney, told Kealing: “The idea that the tape was used to somehow wrap up the remains is completely inconsistent with what Roy saw.”
New Anthony attorney Ann Finnell, a death penalty expert who is working pro bono, filed a motion that her expenses could approach $20,000. Those expenses would include hiring a private investigator.
“Most of those expenses would only crop up if Anthony is convicted of premeditated murder,” WESH anchor Jim Payne noted.
WFTV-Ch. 9 anchor Bob Opsahl listed some Finnell expenses: $7,500 for psychological tests and $4,000 for her travel to visit Casey’s relatives.
http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment_tv_tvblog/2010/10/casey-anthony-orlando-attorney-diana-tennis-adds-to-wofl-coverage.html
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